Do you still have those DX recordings?Not much. Recorded a bit of DX, though.
Do you still have those DX recordings?Not much. Recorded a bit of DX, though.
I remember watching HNIC games in the 90s, TSN by that point was scrambled for sure, although there was one occasion where it wasn't- because the Sharks-Maple Leafs game would not be over before Canucks-Flames was- BC & Alberta got it in its entirety, so they got a 2nd feed up for those 2 cities and it was unscrambled.The CanCom channels were in the clear into the mid-1980s, I think. Watched a lot of midweek NHL games on CHCH, CITV and CHAN. TSN was also in the clear originally. All that was scrambled well before CBC, which went to hash early in 2001 and it was time to go to a small dish. But the big one is still there, all 12 solid feet of it, should I get the urge to install a digital receiver and go hunting for signals. (And install motors to move the monster after all these years.)
NBC on NFL Sundays would usually have as many as 12 feeds going to different cities, CBS the same. For the "feature" games, NBC had 2 feeds- one which was a "flex" feed, the other one would go to the 2 team cities. NBC West Coast feed was a "spot beam" but i remember watching Sisters on that feed at least once due to some news thing. There were the pre-feeds of network shows (I assumed from the production companies to the networks) because i watched a lot of syndicated shows this way. PBS had a national feed, i would watch Sesame Street, Square One Television, Ghostwriter, Barney, Shining Time Station, etc. I watched NCAA Tourney games on CBS this way too, i remember watching a UNLV game one year even though CBS was showing 60 Minutes, in 1988.I had friends who had home dishes in the late 80s but didn't get to play with them. When I worked in a TV station in Indiana, we had the CBS dishes that were automatically switched by the network (they could even switch a specific region for one commercial break), different receivers for recording syndicated show feeds, and one we used for sports backhauls, newsfeeds, some shows and miscellaneous, and late at night when not in use, I got to play with that. CBS and ABC was scrambled by then (mostly but there were exceptions), NBC was in the clear (including their Mountain Time feed, though West Coast was a spot beam). There were the pre-feeds of network shows (I assumed from the production companies to the networks). Most of the syndicated show feeds were in the clear ("how do you know ALL the Jeopardy answers!"). There seemed to be 9,762 home shopping channels, "Shepherd's Chapel" which had the same preacher 24/7 and some oddities like a preview of the Las Vegas Television Network, which in addition to shows about old Las Vegas, ran soft porn overnight. When one of the satellites went down, and networks had to scramble for space, we found a Montreal French language station that mostly carried U.S. movies and shows dubbed into French. This was everything from The Blues Brothers, to the Adam West Batman (le pow?), to Dougie Howser M.D. (Docteur Doogie). There was always something interesting.
Most Canadians live along Canada's southern border and can see our northernmost OTA signals. So Canada's networks were always given special simulcasting permission by our networks to discourage as many Canadian viewers as possible from going around their local stations and watching new shows on the American signals.
I know that back in the days (1970s), some US network shows would air on Canadian networks before they were shown in the US, but that's not "simulcasting". I have to think that was a special treat for US viewers near the border who could get Canadian TV.
I imagine things may have changed, but working at a TV station in the 90s meant we recorded Wheel and Jeopardy shows that aired a week later.I don't think I have found any 2nd-hand VHS recordings of the "clean primetime feeds" for Canada yet. But there were some people with the dishes who would tape the clean master tape feed for The X-Files or Buffy. They seemed to feed 1-3 days before US air.
And speaking of Jeopardy!, you could do the same thing with Wheel of Fortune. Solve all the puzzles early in the morning and find out that the episode you watched on C-Band was actually for the NEXT NIGHT...so you already "cheated". Syndicated Feud may have been in advance, too.
The entire industry needed to consent to these simulcasts because the simulcasts made it equally possible for Americans to view new episodes from cross-border Canadian signals in reverse. So there were basically two choices:I don't quite understand. If the programs were simulcast in Canada and the US, what kind of "special simulcasting permission" would they have been given, and how would it have discouraged Canadian viewers from watching the same shows at the same times on US stations?
In deed. Which is why the simulcasting arrangement began, to remove most reasons to do that. As long as Canadian simulcasts were available, most Canadians simply watched their local Canadian station's version of the broadcast. Exceptions only happened with niche viewers for niche reasons. For example, CRTC standards sometimes forced the Canadian networks to remove violent scenes that the US networks would air. Canadian viewers who were aware of this would watch the "uncensored versions" coming over the border. In other cases, dedicated fans of certain shows would sometimes prefer Canada vs. the US for how that show was treated by the broadcaster. You might get lots of talking over the end credits of your show on Fox, but not on Global in Canada, for example.And why would they even want to seek out the US station, if it's the same program?
In cases of shows that could only be seen on American stations (i.e. shows not in international syndication to Canada), there were never any CRTC rules prohibiting the Canadian public from watching those shows via cross-border signals, or industry attempts to confine all Canadian eyeballs to Canadian shows for ratings purposes. (They may as well have forbade VHS rental shops under that logic.)Or by "going around their local stations", do you mean that the local stations were not showing those programs, and viewers would want to watch them on US television instead, rather than watching whatever was on the Canadian stations at the same time?
That may have been because of Canadian stations airing everything they got from the clean pre-feeds the same day the feeds happened. I can imagine those treats drawing the ire of many of those American stations, and eventually resulting in agreements to not show things up there ahead of their official timeslots down here.I know that back in the days (1970s), some US network shows would air on Canadian networks before they were shown in the US, but that's not "simulcasting". I have to think that was a special treat for US viewers near the border who could get Canadian TV.
I assume you are talking about cable or satellite. There would be no way to prevent Canadian viewers from watching OTA US stations, if they were close enough to receive them.In cases of shows that could only be seen on American stations (i.e. shows not in international syndication to Canada), there were never any CRTC rules prohibiting the Canadian public from watching those shows via cross-border signals, or industry attempts to confine all Canadian eyeballs to Canadian shows for ratings purposes.
I recognize one of the promotional segments in that video. In 1986, channel 40 Sacramento somehow convinced the great Leslie Nelsen to travel to the station and film tons of on-set promos not only for its 10 o'clock news, but for the debut of its own Ku-band satellite truck. You can find broadcast-quality copies of his all spots, taken from the original 1" C master tapes, here. The fourth is a long outtakes reel of his work. Prepare for fart noises.Who remembers this one Conus Satellite Trucks that TV stations used in the 1980's. at that time those trucks used a satellite dish to relay video from one part of the country to another whenever a local TV station needed to get the segment nationwide. That was the big deal at that time when local TV stations can send their news clips nationwide and have those segments appear on the networks.
For any archivists or aircheckers who might be interested: I found the following link while looking through the above video's comments. Seems the uploader also uploaded the full raw 10 mbit/s MPEG-2 capture of the satellite feed at native 480i to the Internet Archive. See details in the description:![]()
ABC News coverage of the 1989 Bay Area (Loma Prieta) earthquake - from ABC satellite feed (10/17/89)
This recording starts at the beginning of the ABC's coverage of Game 3 of the 1989 World Series -- at 5:04pm Pacific Time, a magnitude 6.9 earthquake hit, kn...www.youtube.com
Who remembers this one Conus Satellite Trucks that TV stations used in the 1980's. at that time those trucks used a satellite dish to relay video from one part of the country to another whenever a local TV station needed to get the segment nationwide. That was the big deal at that time when local TV stations can send their news clips nationwide and have those segments appear on the networks.
Conus, in a joint venture with Viacom, also operated the All-News Channel, a relatively low-profile operation with a similar news wheel format as CNN Headline News. Here's a 1991 edition with Patrice Formby, who would later move to Headline News:
Back in the 80s, former CBS reporter Daniel Schorr was hired by CNN. At the time, they didn't have cable in DC, and Schorr lived in the District. It was also before DirecTV. So he had CNN pay for a "big ugly dish" on his front lawn. He was living in the ritzy Kalorama area of DC, so it really stood out. When he left CNN after a few years, they left the dish on his front lawn.
There's a picture of Schorr and his dish in his NPR obit:
The dish apparently wasn't popular with his neighbors, according to this story:

Here's a 20/20 report from 1984 about people with backyard C-Band dishes: